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Issue 412 -- December 19 - 25, 2009

Front Page

News Headlines

Local and Regional Affairs

Kenya Border With Somalia To Remain Shut

Ethiopia's Ogaden And Oromo Dissidents Demonstrate Against Meles In Copenhagen

Ministers From IGAD Signed A Regional Policy Framework For Livestock Sector Development

Eritrean Athletes Given Interim Asylum In Kenya, Standard Says

Somalia's Shabaab Loot UN Compounds

Suspected Somalia Pirates To Be Freed By Dutch Navy

Editorial

The Question Yusuf Garad Will Never Ask

Features & Commentary

International News

Opinion

Meeting With K’naan, The Somali Celebrity Rapper

Muslims, Beyond The Headlines

Burying Stigma In Somaliland

Hargeysa, Somaliland, December 19, 2009 – When a young HIV-positive woman recently passed away in Hargeysa, capital of the self-declared republic of Somaliland, none of the women in her family volunteered to carry out the traditional Islamic rite of washing the body before burial.

“Her clothes are still hanging where she died because people think they can be affected if they touch them,” said Abdillahi Omar, a man in his 40s. Eventually, a group of HIV-positive women volunteered to wash the woman’s body.

Most people in Somalia still avoid touching or associating with people living with the virus.

“Each one of us who has announced that he or she has HIV/Aids was thrown out of his or her family. I was a soldier ... as soon as they got the information [about my HIV status], I was told not to enter the camp - they considered me as being the epidemic itself,” Mr Omar said.

“Our children are sent back home by the school administrators for no reason other than the fact that their parents have HIV ... we experience it daily,” said Amina Ali, a mother of four.

Need for education

Experts attribute the intense stigmatization of people living with the virus to ignorance and the strong association of HIV with immorality and ‘non-Muslim’ behavior; United Nations estimates say less than 10 per cent of the population have accurate knowledge about HIV transmission.

“I know that HIV can be transmitted by using the same toothbrush as someone who is infected, or if the same [injection] needle used on an HIV-positive person is used on you,” said Sa’id Ahmed, a student at the University of Hargeysa. “If someone in my family had Aids ... of course I would feel the fear of the disease.”

Sexual intercourse is the main method of transmission in Somalia, but Ahmed did not mention sex as a way of transmitting HIV and there is no HIV education in schools.

“We have carried out a lot of awareness to reduce the stigma, as well as giving people information about how the disease transmitted,” said Hassan Omar Hagga, director of training at the Somaliland Aids Commission (SOLNAC) secretariat.

Somalia’s most recent progress report to the United Nations General Assembly Special Session on HIV/Aids noted that widespread stigma and discrimination were among the factors raising HIV vulnerability.

High stigma and low risk perception mean few people are tested for HIV, and the country’s antiretroviral (ARV) programme is still in its infancy.

“Of an estimated 13,000 people living with HIV in Somaliland, only 800 have access to ARVs,” said Mohamed Hussein Osman, executive director of SOLNAC.

New law 

SOLNAC has also been trying to push through parliament proposed legislation giving rights to people living with HIV, and making it illegal for doctors to reveal a patient’s HIV status without their permission.

“[The draft] law criminalizes discrimination against the people who live with the disease, specifies their requirements for care, and stipulates punishments for those who try to deliberately transmit the virus,” said Hassan Omar Hagga.

Somaliland has an HIV prevalence of 1.4 per cent, but recent data suggest that the Horn of Africa could be moving from a concentrated epidemic to a generalized one.

maj/kr/he

Source: IRIN, December 14, 2009













 

 


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